' ' v. - 1 i i glipi- g .ijgHBgijfek www " ' - - B. F. SCHWE1ER, "' ' : " ' ... THE C0.V3TITCTI0S-T1IE C3I0X-AXD THE IXFOKCEMEXT OF THE LAWS. . . . . Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXYII. MIFmNTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA. DECEMBER 17, 1873. , NO. 51. I """",'MwAw-swawwawawawaam Poetry. Aaiinii. 5e aprlng or wnaif'i beaary hata nek grace A I bare seen U on astamaal face. -DIM. t Cu yoa UI1 em, IrUo, What doth make aw 1st 70a sof Is U youth T Oh! that Is gone! Ia U beaut I that hail juI . , Then, prithee. Ml Be, Evila, Why It to I lore 70a to. Spring 1 lev bar vie Leu blue, Aad Snnmer, with bar rases, too, Flashing ia tb morning's dew. Bat, of ail the seasons four, . Aatanu touch my hearta core. Wit her garnered guides store. ' Beat, 1 lor her peastTt face, Beet, I lore her ripe embrace. Glowing ia her mellow grace r Which ao painter's art eaa trace. a her hoaoai let ate lie, la the 8oath wind's melancholy, 'Seath October's purple aky. Where the gorg eoaa staple sigh Spring aad Sammer lullaby. Aad with Aatuma Uva ana die ! . Sow 70a kaow, dear Erllo, What doth makt aie loYe 70a eo. . Sunset. We call material thle fair world of our, aad ao it seems to gross, material eyes. That see ao beauty la Earth'e foreet Bowers, X hearenly spleadore ia her eaaaet skies. Bat are there aet, ia 7oader rortfeon, eceae, A beanty and a graadear aot of earth T A glory breaking from 70B cloudy screea. Keeanllng to the aoal its nobler birth t " Caa thiage material each fair forma assume, Aad thaa delight aad charm the hamaa arrnd r Or doth the Spirit with It rays lllama Their iamoet depths, from matter now refined. That man aiy thai with It eonrnrainoa hold, ' Aad leara of higher thing! thaa sense has tald F 31 i s c el iany Babylon's Haasins Gardens. Oar pretty hanging baskets, with their suspension wires completely draped in delicate climbing ivies and standing mosses, with their masses of beautiful trailing plants, their drooping . grasses, Tineas, mimosas, musk-soeiited and covered with brilliant golden flow ers, thongh lilipntian in size, are liter ally hanging gardens. Bat even should they be made a million times larger, their plan is so utterly different that they coal J never saggest the faintest notion of the hanging gardens of Baby lon, about the very name of which there is a ring of poetic grandeur and a flavor of oriental magnificence. They were literally paradises, for thongh our word is from the Greek paradietos, the Greeks borrowed it from Persia, where to this day the rich satraps rejoice in their paradises or pleasure gardens. Xenophon mentions those of Belesis, governor of Syria ; and such as he be held them, apparently, we find them ! described by Chard in and other modern travelers. The hanging gardens of Babylon were simply a very costly variety of the paradise, such only as ' " princely wealth could afford. Their origin is attributed to Semiramis by . some ; others say that they were in vented by a king of Syria to charm the melancholy of one of his wives of Per sian origin, who sighed to behold again the verdant mountains of her native land, Strebo and Diodorous Sicular have written about these famous hang ing gardens, Philo of Byzantium if, indeed, he is the author of the treatise on the seven wonders of the world, by some attributed to him and many others. They were called hanging gardens, doubtless because of the huge branch ing palms and other trees, overhanging the balustrade on the summit of the high walls that enclosed the paradise. These walls were about one hundred and thirty yards long on each of the four sides, twenty-two feet thick, and fifty cubits high, or over ninety-one feet according to the Hebrew cubit. The terraces were upheld by immensely strong galleries, whose ceilings were formed by hewn stones sixteen feet long and four wide. Besting on these stones was a layer of reeds, mixed with a great quantity of asphalt, and on this was a floor of lire-dried bricks laid in mortar ; finally, a floor of lead plates to prevent any moisture from penetrating the foundation of the terraces, the soil of which rested upon the leaden floor, and was of sufficient depth to hold and nourish trees of fifty feet high, and thousands of rare plants culled from all parts of the known world. All these were kept in a perennially flourishing condition, we are informed, by water raised from the Euphrates through the aid of machinery concealed from view in certain rooms made in the galleries. The galleries, also, contained many royal apartments, variously decorated and furnished. Decently lighted, they could not have been ; but one can easily imagine that a walk around those upper terraces on a fine moonlight night, the senses charmed by soft music, and by waves of perfume rising from the wil derness of flowers and shrubs below, - must have been enchanting. Enthusiasm Xerensary to Success. In his "Getting on in the World," Professor Matthews says there was never, probably, a time in the world's history when high success in any pro fession demanded harder or more in cessant labor than now. Men can no longer go at one leap into eminent position. The world, as Emerson says, is no longer clay, but rather iron in the hands of its workers, and men have got to hammer out a pla;e for themselves by steady and rugged blows. Above all, a deep and burning enthusiasm is wanted in every one who would achieve great ends, o great thing is or can be done without it It is a quality that is seen wherever there are earnest and determined workers in the silence of the study, and amid the roar of cannon ; in the painting of a picture, and in the carving of a statue. Ability, learning, accomplishment, opportunity, all are well; but they do not, of themselves, insure success. Thousands have all these, and live and die without benefit ing themselves or others. .Men, on the other hand, of mediocre talents, often scale the dizzy steps of excellence and fame because they have hrra faith and high resolve. It ia this solid faith in one's mission the rooted belief that it is the one thing to which he has been : called this enthusiasm, attracting an Agassis to the Alps or Amazon, impel ling a Pliny to explore the volcano in which he is to lose his life, and nerving a Vernet, when tossing in a fierce tem pest, to sketch the waste of waters, and even the wave that is leaping to devour him,' that marks the heroio spirit ; and wherever it is found, success, sooner or later,' is almost inevitable, . Why is'a screw in loose like a screw in tight f Because it is in-secure. A CnRISTJIAS STORY. It was Christ mas eve. It had taken the Earth the entire day to array herself for the coming fes tivities; and now. us the last fin ishing touch had been added and the had nothing 10 do but fold Uer hands and ;ook pretty, she .ound her party iress very cold. and shivered again and again its the heedless Night Wind went whistling by. leaving all the doors open. Larth was very beautiful this eve in her soft white drapery, and her jewels flasueu aua sparkled in the light wit a rare Dnuiancy ; ner lauea Drown locks were powdered o'er, and crystal daisies thrust therein, and a clond of misty lace was thrown around her, which added greatly to her attire. Win ter, the great artist, had designed and furnifched this toilette, faultless in every respect. Hud his work ended here it would have been well ; but when he beheld how charming Earth was in her regal dress, he fell down before her and worshipped even what he had crea ted ; and Earth, pleased with his adu lation, steeled her heart against every one else, and promised her hand to him in marriage, her whole soul, like many another maiden s captivated with anti cipations of the beautiful clothes with which his indulgence would supply her. I could go still farther, and tell you that she fulfilled her vow and became Winter's bride ; of how Winter, like many another husband grew tired of his little wife, fondness for dress, and de serted her, carrying her jewels with him ; how Earth wept her soul away in tears ; how her pretty white dresses grew ragged and thin ; and how finally they laid her "underneath the violets, like many another sad heart ; but all this has nothing to do with our story. It was Christmas eve, as I have said. One walking the brilliantly-lighted streets of the city, and gazing in at the windows, exposing for sale their choice and beautiful goods, their showy and attractive gifts; looking into the bright, happy faces as they passed, and listen ing to theexcited children'sexclamations of delight, as, with older ones, they witnessed the rare display, would have needed nothing farther to have told him that it was the eve of a great holiday. But turning asiJe into some of the nar row streets ; walking on, on, on, till the crowds of eager faces gradually disap peared ; listening to the curses of the poor wretch in the gutter.or the drunken brawl of others over the way ; seeing only now and then straggling rays of light from the miserable dwellings piled up along the walk ; and catching from the countenances of those who passed only stolid, sullen glances, or sad, weary looks, he would have required an alma nac, to have told him that the great day of rejoicing was so near at. hand. Yet many of the inmates of these wretched Bljs were? wcu awoxo uutk mniuuriuw was unnstmas. un some me iaci maue no impression ; they had long ago be come indifferent. Others it rendered ' bitter, and they cursed the poverty that ever denied them the wherewithal to celebrate a holiday. Some wept as they thought of brighter days past. And a few, yes, there were some even in this locality, that drew nearer to each other and thanked God that, thongh they suffered below, they should reign above, because of His precious gifts to all man kindthe Christ-child Jests. "Brick Bow" was a tenement house 01 ine poorer . ter in its way, and a half-dozen families huddled together under its well venti- .1 l 1 : 1 1' . :i i 1 lated roof, and called it home. In the basement of the east end lived Mrs. Mentz and her little brood. "Poor Mrs. Mentz," the neighbors were wont to exclaim, as they thought of the many mouths to feed ; but to have deprived this cheery, brave woman of her family would have been to have taken away her comfort in life her riches as she termed them. So we will love rather than pity her. There was Johnnie Mentz, the widow's oldest, a lad of six teen, but a helpless cripple, who spent his days in bed ; yet Mrs. Mentz often shook her head as she toiled over her tub, and murmured to herself, "What in the world would . we do without Johnnie ?" for the dear fellow was sun shine incarnate. Then there was Andy, a boy of fourteen, a sturdy stout hearted little chap, who helped to buy bread with the papers he sold and the boots he blacked, for Andy was never idle. Horace came next ; he was only twelve, but his little broom and his clever ways added many a cent to the scanty aum in the family pocket. Then there were three others young ones to be sure but as such are seldom favored with the formality of an introduction, I wish to depart from the custom of slighting the least, and remark that their names were respectively Peter, Sarah and Vic. They were all together this night, all but Andy ; he had not yet returned, though it was getting quite late, and the candle was already half burned Oh, sech things as I seed to-day, Johnnie, in the windys, me an' young Scronty," said Horace. "Oh, sech piles an' piles o' things!" Then Johnnie turned over on his side, and all the members of the Mentz family fell to listening to Horace, who had perched himself on the bed beside the cripple. "There was sleds," continued tbe boy, "all yelly an' red ; the shiniest runners, an' the quickest time in "em, know ! There was skates whole crowds on 'em; they'd fit little Peter here, or any of us, or me," and perhaps Horace gave a sigh here, and little Peter's eyes grew very large. "Then there was trees real nns chock full of shiny things, an' tovs, an dolls, an Noahs arks, an' candy horns ; an' there was cakes there as big as as an ash-sifter, every bit, an' all white an' crusty like." Little Peter licked his chops very like a little dog, and Sarah and Vic swallowedseveraltiraesveryfast. "And, oh, the oranges as big as Vic's head, and as round and as yelly 1" An' ath thweet?" lisped the pet, and then tbe Mentzes laughed. . "An' the fathers wonld go in an' pick out the very best things of all for their little boys, an' pull ont great bills, and never wink once as they give 'em over. An' the mothers would look as smily as ourn, and git the biggest dolls in the lot;" here Sarah and Via pricked up their ears, while Horace rolled np his eyes, and looking purposely very sober, added, "but 111 be blamed if I can see what dolls are good for; you can't skate with 'em or eat 'em ;" and then he paused for the exclamations of re- ill 1 proach to subside in the direction of his two sisters. Then he looked aneer. I at t 1 . . . . , as mouga trying noi to laugn, ana saiu Scronty had remarked, "if dolls was fonr-bfaded knives they'd be worth laimn aoout. "Xever mind, dears," said Mrs. Mentz to her little daughter: "you must remember Horace and Willie Scront are boys ; go on, my son, we all want to near. "There was books oh. Johnnie!" "Never mind," said Johnnie, a little paler than usual. "Oh, but they was so splendid, and Scronty said the inside o' one o' them would take the ache an' the cold all out of a feller readin' of it, an' when I saw everyone agoin' in an jest burin' everytnin , as tno' twas nothin at all, I thought what bully stuff money was, and " Horace stopped ; his throat choked, and he could say no more. Then all the little Mentz family grew very still, and Johnnie stroked Horace's hot head with his white fingers. "If we could only have one Merry said little Peter, looking down at his Dare toes. "There is one precious Gift that money cannot buy. said Mrs. Mentz, whose face, in sympathy with her chil dren, had been momentarily shaded, but now shone forth with unusual radi ance, "an' all this reioicin' n' presentin' is because o' this Gift. God knows we would celebrate the bestowin o' His dear Son to ns, if the power to do it was own ; but it ain't. But shall our hearts be sad an' our lips dumb becanse o' this? Come, come, dearies, be joyful to-night be glad God has given to ns a Saviour I Let us kneel down an' thank Him for Christ." : And around their mother's chair, and in their mother's voice, they prayed to God to forgive their ungratefulness, and to accept their hearts as their Christmas offering. Gold, frankincense and myrrh was not theirs to bring, but their lives should be consecrated unto lum and His service. Thus the ilentaes cheered up and were comforted, and God sent His blessing down upon them. Merry voices were heard outside as they arose from their knees, and Andy and Scronty (a poor neighbor s child). and Jimmy Beeves (ditto), rushed into the room in the noisiest manner of happy boys. "Oh, Horace ! Oh, Johnnie," shouted Andy, "it s gom to be the biggest Christmas ever yon saw 1 It was a man. an' he give me a purse fall 'thout my askin' a word, and I've got a shawl for yon. mother, an' the lotzest, lolsest things 1 and a big book for Johnnie, too I an' young Scronty has got a four- blader I bought him 1 an we ve got a big cake for us all I an somethiu for Horace and little Peter, an' the sissies, an' all ! and oranges beside !" - "It was a stranger man," said Serouty explaining, in a low voice, to Mr. Mentz, while Andy and the children, frantic with delight, proceeded to undo tbe many packages, "an he said he'd been a watchin Andy, an' he had eyes like his boy what died ; an' he just made him take the money. It's so little for the rich nns to give thin's, but so much for us poor folks to git, ain't it ?" and Scronty laughed, thongh his lips trembled. Such an excitement as followed, my pen fails to portray, but I just love to tell you that the joy was very, very great, and that I believe God was look ing ont for the little Mentzes all the time, and that he pat it in the heart of that noble man to bestow his money upon them. It was late ere they retired, for they were not loth to celebrate now that they had the means. And as for the benefactor of that family, had he heard the blessings that were called down upon him, and listened to the prayers of the Mentzes which ascended to the throne of God, I think he would have said with all his heart, "Truly, it is heayen earth to be aUe t0 give " . Mrs. Brownine's Greatest I'oem. I am disposed to consider the "Son nets from the Portuguese" as, if not the finest, a portion of tbe finest subjective poetry in our literature. Their form reminds us of an English prototype, and it is no sacrilege to say that their music is showered from a higher and purer atmosphere than , that of the Swan of Avon. We need not enter upon cold comparison of their respec tive excellences; but Shakespeare's per sonal poems were the overflow of his impetuous youth : his broader vision, that took a world within its ken, was absolutely objective; while Mrs. Brown ing's Love Sonnets are the outpourings of a woman's tenderebi amotions, at an epo;h when her art was most mature, and her whole nature exalted by a pas sion that to such a being comes but for once and all. Here, indeed, the singer rose to her height. Here she is ab sorbed in rapturous utterance, radiant and triumphant with her own joy. The mists have risen and her sight is clear. Her mouthing and affectation are for gotten, her lips cease to stammer, the lyrical spirit has full control. The son net, artificial in weaker hands, becomes swift with feeling, red with a "veined humanity," the chosen vehicle of a royal woman's vows. Graces, felicities, vigor, glory of speech, here are so crow ded as to tread each upon the other's sccptered pall. The first sonnet, equal to any in our tongue, is an overture containing the motive of the canticle ; "not lteath, but Love" had seized her unaware. The growth of this hap piness, her worship of its bringer, her doubts of her own worthiness, are the theme of these poems. She is in a sweet and, to us, pathetic surprise at the delight which at last had fallen to her! The wonder wis not 7t quite gone t'rum that stiU look of hen." Never was man or minstrel so honored as her "most gracious singer of high poems." In the tremor of her love she undervalued herself, with all her fee bleness of body, it was enough for any man to live within the atmosphere of such a fool ! In fine, the Portuguese Sonnets, whose title was a screen be hind which the singer poured out her fall heart, are the most exquisite poetry hitherto written by a woman, and of themselves justify ns in pronouncing their author the greatest of her sex, on the ground that (the highest mission of a female poet is the expression of love), and that no other woman, ap proaching her in genius, has essayed the ultimate form of that expression. An analogy with "In Memoriam," may be derived from their arrangement and their presentation of a single analytic theme ; but Tennyson's poem, though exhibiting equal art, more subtile rea soning and comprehensive thought, is devoted to the analysis of philosophio Grief, while the Sonnets reveal to ns that Love which is the most ecstatic of human emotions and worth all other gifts in life. Scribner'i Monthly. Too late forthe fair An old baehelor. AGSES SOREL. "THE LIUT OF UL.tlTl." From London Society. 1 . ' This celebrated favorite of Charles VIL of France one who has inherited from her own time to ours, after a lapse of more than four centuries, the dis tinctive tobnquet of "the beautiful Agnes" was the daughter of M. Soreau (vulgarly called Sorel, according to De Mezerai), the Seigneur de St, Geran, a noble gentleman of louraine. ' She was born in 1409, and in 1431, when in her two-and-twentieth year, received the appointment of attendant or lady of honor to Isabella, Queen of Naples and Sicily, from whose court and service she passed into that 01 Mary, daughter of Louis IL, Ioke of Anjou, afterwards Queen 01 Charles VIL. where her rank, education, and, more than these, her marvelous beauty, all conspired to win her the perilous attention of a king who was younger than herself. Agnes was not seventeen, as the fair authoress of the "Histoire des Favorites" asserts she was, at this time ; but had attained the more mature age of at least twenty-eight perhaps thirty, as Oliver de la Marche, a con temporary, when recording some event which took place in 1444, tells ns that "the King had just elevated a poor lady, a pretty woman, called Agnes Sorel, and placed her in such triumph and power that her state was compara ble to that of the great princess of tbe realm." Her features were beautiful and ex pressive of extreme gentleness; her skin has been described as being of the hue of alabaster, and her hair was mar velously golden in its brightness. She was then in the full bloom and beauty of womanhood, and possessed a vivacity of manner which "spread an air full of charm on the least of her actions, so that the most insensible souls could not resist her" ("Histoire des Favorites"). "Heaven," says this authoress, "had not only endowed Agnes with the charms of face ; she had an air full of grace, an admirable ngure, more wit than any other woman in the world, and tue most delicate and hnely turned, with a certain greatness of soul which led her naturally to generosity ; all her inclinations were noble ; she was atten tive, compassionate, ardeat in friend ship, discreet, sincere, and, in short, altogether fitted to make herself beloved to distraction." - De Mezerai writes of her as a "very agreeable and generous lady, who, by setting herself np as the equal of the greatest princesses, became the envy of the Court and the scandal of France." With all her errors, Agnes was admitted to be lavish to the poor, to be pious, generally humble, and always patriotic and full of public spirit. The majority of historians have written xaost favora bly of her, and never did the mistress of a king, especially a king who was her junior, make bo wise a use of her perilous power, which she ever em ployed, only for the good of others. Pride and an extreme love of dress are the chief errors alleged against her; but to her influence over Charles VIL must be attributed all the good that ever appeared in him, and the eflort to which he was roused that essay by which, at last, the invading English were driven from the soil of France ; for he had been a lover of pleasure, "and of the fair sex, which never can be a vice," adds Voltaire, "save when it leads to vicious actions." Charles was neither a warlike nor a high-spirited king. The influence ofj England in I ranee after the death 01 its conqueror, Henry V., was so nobly sustained by his brother, the Duke of Bedford, that alter the demise ol Charles VL, his successor had been crowned at Poictiers, P.heims being then in possession of the foe ; and he was but the monarch of a nominal kingdom, France having greatly aided the English invaders, as she was rent by two rival factions, one led by the Duke of Burgundy and the other by the Duke of Orleans. Charles VE had been alternately the prisoner of each, and the Dauphin was the scoff of both often a fugitive, and always in danger of destruction. When the latter became Charles VIL aided by an alliance with Scotland the usual "cat's-paw" of the French in their English wars and by a body of Scot tish troops ander the Earl of Buchan, who was constable of France, he made some show of resistance, when all hope seemed at an end, and to this unwonted activity he was roused by Agnes Sorel. He had already conceived the feeble idea of retiring into Langnedoc or Dauphipy, and contenting himself with the defence of these minor provinces, which must, eventually, have been wrested from him. Mary of Anjon, a princess of great prudence and merit, vehemently opposed this measure, which she saw would lead to a general desertion of his cause by the French people. "The fair Agnes Sorel," says Hume, who lived in entire amity with the Queen, seconded all her remonstrances, and threatened that if he (Charles) thus pusillanimously threw away the sceptre of France, she would seek at the court of England a fortune that was corres pondent to her wishes. Thus, the love of her on one hand, and dread of losing her on the other, roused in the breast of Charles VIE a glow of courage which neither just ambition nor pure patriotism could kindle, and he resolved to dispute every inch of French soil with his imperious enemies,-rather than yield ingloriously to an evd fortune and to the loss 01 his crown ana mistress. And thus, in urging him to the field, Mary of Anjou was forced to seek the assistance of that fair rival who had supplanted her ; and she seems at all times to have borne with singular sweetness of temper with s resignation that some might think savoted of indif ference or stupidity the alienation of the King's love for herself ; and neither by action or word does she seem ever to have reproached the reigning favorite. Bat now a new ally came in the per son of Joan of Arc ; victory attended her banners, and in two months Charles VLL was crowned again, a step consid ered necessary after the double corona tion of young Henry of England st Westminster and Paris. The loss of the latter eity soon followed. The Maid of Orleans perished at the stake ; but her mission was accomplished t ranee was free, and England -was glad to sign the treaty of Arras. After this consummation Charles abandoned himself entirely to the so ciety of Agnes Sorel ; "ease and pros perity," according to De Mezerai, "plunged him into dalliance ana eilem- inate softness." Ghe was his greatest passion, states Duclos, and was the most worthy of it. She loved Charles ten derly for himself, and had no other object in her conduct than the glory of her somewhat soft lover and the good of the state. Agnes Sorel, ha adds, distinguished herself by qualities pre ferable to those which are usually louna in her sex a rather obscure phrase. But, despite what some allege of her humility, ostentation and a love of splendor are aaid by others to have been among her weaknesses ; but such are pardonable enough in a beautiful wo man. At court she appeared in all the state of a royal princess. Her apartments were more expensively decorated with hangings of silk and taffeta, with furni ture and tapestries, than those of the Queen, Mary of Anjou. She had a larger and more splendid retinue of servants than her royal mistress, and had quite as much reverence shown her. Her conches, her linen, her vessels of gold and silver, her rings and other jewelry, all surpassed in beauty and in value those of the Queen. Even her kitchen surpassed that of the neglected wife ; ''for with this woman, called Agnes, whom I have seen and known. says the anthor of the "Chronique des Dues de Bourgogne," "the King was terribly besotted. Her robes were more costly and Lei trains were longer than those worn by any 01 the royal princesses ; and it was remembered that to show the extreme fairness of her skin and beautiful con tour of her bust, she had all her dresses more dccoUetceg, or cut lower in front, than had ever been the custom at the Court of France. In some burst of temper. Ames had been accused of having so arrogantly disregarded the feelings of the Queen that she was struck on the mouth by the son of the latter, the Dauphin, Louis XL, in whose whole character was but one undeniably redeeming point a love for his mother, with a tender reverence for her memory. Agnes died in the year 1450. as many historians have affirmed, of poison, a common suspicion in those days, and lor long after. De Mezerai states the circumstance broadly and clearly, that when the King was at Jumieges, four- teen miles from Rouen, where there1 was then a vast and famous abbey con taining no less than two thousand four hundred monks and lay brethren, "they (t. C, the courtiers) poisened his dear Agnes de Soreau, without whom he could not live one moment." It is stated that Francis I., who lived about a century after her, believed in the gentleness and patriotism of "the Lady of Beauty;" as she was named, and, finding a picture of her among others, he wrote the following lines under it : "Gerjtllle Agnea! ploz i'bonnmr tn merit re La cauae eunt de France recouvref , Vue ee que pent ihhiun cloitre ouvrer Cloae auuuaui. ou Lieu UeTote heruiltc. Dress Tor Farmer's Wive. We copy some extracts from a paper read before the Washington Grange of the Patrons of Husbandry by Mrs. R. B. Bruce. She says : In regard to dress in the first place, let us dress within our means, and for comfort and conveni ence, instead of fashion. First in order, let us dress the head. God in his in finite wisdom covered the head with hair, and the good book says that long hair is an ornament to a woman, and since God's works are perfect and no work of art can compare with his, let us then arrange our natural hair in a tasty manner, and not let fashion load our heads with hemp or borrowed hair. Then the covering for the head ; of what real account is the present style, except for ornament. Oar husbands and brothers wear a hat that protects their heads and faces from the hot rays of the sun in summer, and in winter a fur cap or hat which is both warm and comfortable to shield them from the cold blasts, while we place upon our heads a cupola, erroneously called bonnet or hat, held in position by gny ropes and stays, and if we wish for comfort we must carry a parasol to pro tect our heads from the scorching rays of the sun in summer, and in winter, over this cupola, wrap some extra fix ings to keep out the cold, which is neither handy or convenient, especially when the team is waiting for as. Oh for the good, old-fashioned days when a bonnet was made to cover the head, light and cool for summer, and warm and comfortable for winter. I could hardly adopt the Quaker styles, yet I think they are far preferable to the fashions of the present day. Perhaps a medium between the two would suit my taste. And our dress, of whatever fabric it may be made in a becoming style, easy fitting and convenient, and not counter feit deformity by carrying a pack upon our backs to the inconvenience of our selves, and to the utter disgust of all sensible men and women. Deformities will come to ns fast enongh at best ; let ns, then, not tempt our Maker by ridic ulously attiring ourselves, lest He in his vengeance may deal with ns or our offsprings. If we had been born thns deformed, Oh, what a pity it would have been t then why do it for fashion's sake ? And then again, how much more convenient it would be, if, when a dress is made, it would stay made and look well until it is worn out, and how much it would lessen our labors. And then how much good could be done with the time and means now spent in useless display. My tastes are plain and sim ple. I consider such an over-loaded, puffed out concern as yon see at the present time for o dress, not only ridic ulous but vulgar. The question arises. What are you to do with the girls ? they want to dress in style or as others do. I will answer, as the twig is bent so the tree inclines. And our under dress, let it be suffi ciently warm, as many of the aches and pains that we have can be traced to in sufficient clothing. Let our shoes be such as will keep our feet dry and warm, as our health depends much upon this point. I would recommend a thick woolen stocking for winter, and cotton only for summer wear. And, finally, let our whole apparel be for comfort and convenience. Let there be a variety in our wardrobe, for variety is the spice of life. These views I would recommend for the following reasons : First, It would lessen the burden of many who now find it hard to maintain their place in society. It would lessen the force of temptations which often lead men to barter honesty and honor for display. If there was less strife in dress, it would enable people in moderate circumstances to go more into society. It wonld enable all classes to attend church. It would save valu able time. It wonld relieve our means from a serious pressure, and thus enable ns do more for good enterprises. A Leavenworth photographer has been explaining the altogether-too-elaborate way in which he procured a "spirit" photograph. He says he first took a picture of Mr. Harris,and painted his whiskers out. Then he cut the face out of a lady's photograph and pasted Harris' face in. He made a negative from this, and then a transparent posi tive. He next held this positive before a sensitised plate in a dark room and the ghost-picture wss made. Tlarket lor Old 'aria. Clothes tn C. C. Fulton writes from Paris to the Baltimore American : This is called the Marche du Vieux Linge. It is a market for old clothes and stuffs, shoes and tools, and is a very extensive affair, It is about seven hundred feet long by two hundred leet Droad, boil in iron pavilions, and contains two thousand four hundred places for dealers, each of about thirteen square feet, and each and all these stalls are filled with deal ers, from which some ides can be ob tained ;of the scene here presented. This was built as a speculation, the city granting the contractor the right to build it and receive the rents for fifty years, at the same time paying the city two hundred thousand francs per annum, and the whole to revert to the city at the expiration of fiftv vears. It cost the contractor three million five hun dred thousand francs. The new stalls set np for the dealers are so elegant. and the articles offered for sale so cle verly "renovated," that the visitor can scarcely believe himself to be in an "old clothes" mart, It has been a very suc cessful speculation ; and the poor man can here procure a very respectable out nt lor a very small outlay, xhese dealers are constantly on the lookout for the contents of rubbish rooms, old clothes, and all the odds and ends that accumulate in an easy-living household. The space occupied by this structure is two entire blocks, the street passing through it being roofed over with iron, glass and zinc It is a very elegant structure, built on the model of the Grand Central market, entirely of iron. The roof is about forty feet high, with a greater elevation in the centre, where there is an immense open gallery, reached by two flights of iron stairs. Seeing that there was a crowd of people up there, we ascended, and found a doorkeeper, who required one son ad mission. This proved to be a place for the sale ol old clothes too far gone for renovation, and the articles were piled up in lines along the floor, through which the purchasers, to the number probably of a thousand, were circulat ing. Both buyer and seller pays one sou admission, which defrays the ex pense of this branch of the establish ment. Musty-looking old shoes by the cart load were here, shocking old hats and all manner of woman's apparel. They were doing an extensive business, however, and daring our ramble we were frequently invited to purchase some threadbare garment, from which it may be judged how shabby the Eu ropean traveler gets in his outward ap pearance by the time he reaches Paris. The goods displayed in the two thou sand fonr hundred stalls below looked as brigbt and new, almost, as the dis play ia the windows on the boulevards. though many of them were slightly out of fashion." French Dreanre of Itoyalfy. Under the old French Monarchy the title of "Dauphin" was borne by the eldest son of the King ; in the latter years of Louis XV. it was borne by his grandjon, afterwards the unfortunate Louis XVL The title was originally that of the sovereign lords of the province of Dauphine, which, in the middle of the fourteenth century, was presented to France by tbe last of these lords on condition that the heir-appa rent to the throne Bhould be called Dauphin of Vienne, and actually govern the province. Almost sovereign powers were exercised by the Uaupuui at first. but gradually his title became one of honor only. Originally it was derived from the lords of the soil having the hgure of a dolphin lor their crest, the name of which was gradually transferred to the province. The Count de Cham bord, who, because his grandfather was King of France, claims the crown as a n'7if, wholly ignoring the fact that the French people ought to be permitted to choose their own sovereign if the Mon archy is restored, is childless, but, now that the Count de Paris has acknowl edged him as head of the Bourbon line, returns the compliment of writing to him as "Dauphin" that is, one pre tender to the crown of France gives to another a title which belongs only to the heir of that crown. At tho same time that crown is but a shadow of the past. The throne which it symbolizes is in the dust, De. Paris addresses De Chambord as "your Majesty," and, in return, the Bourbon addresses the Orleans pretender as "My dear Dau phin." They settled everything between them. De Chambord as King and De Paris, theheir-presumptive,as Dauphin, may sound very well, but the will of France stands like an inaccessible brazen wall between these gentlemen and the realization of their dream of royalty. A House of oar Own. Next to being married to the right person there is nothing so important in one's life as to live under one's own roof. There is something more than s poetical charm in the expression of the wife. "We have our cosey house; it is thrice dear to us because it is our own. We hsve bought it with the savings of our earnings. Many were the soda fountains, the confectionery saloons, and the necessities of the market we had to pass ; many a time my noble husband denied himself of the comfort of tobacco, the refreshing draught of beer, wore his old clothes, and even patched up boots ; and I, O, me ! made my old bonnet do, wore the plainest clothes, did the plainest cooking; saving was the order of the house, and to have s house of our own had been our united aim. Now we have it ; there is no landlord troubling ns with rais ing the rent, and exacting this and that. There is no fear harbored in our bosom that in sickness or old age we will be thrown out of house and home, and the money we haye saved which otherwise would have gone to pay rent, is suffi cient to keep us in comfort in the winter days of life." What a lesson do the above words teach, and how well it would be if hun dreds of families would heed them, and instead of living in rented houses, which take a Urge share of their earn ings to pay the rent, dress and eat ac cordingly, would bravely curtail ex penses, and concentrate their efforts on having " a home of their own." Better a cottage of your own than a rented palace. Deatli from at Yellow Jacket's nil as;. A daughter of Geo. Murpny, of Vienna, Scott county, Ind., was eating some apple-butter, when a yellow jacket alighted upon it and was inadvertently swallowed. The insect stung her in the throat, which at once commenced swelling, and in less than an hour was completely closed, causing her death by suffocation. A citizen of Danville, Vs., recently bequeathed f 1000 each to five churches of different denominations, of Bona of which he wss a member. The Yontlis Column. To Whom It Hay Concern. I wont stay at home till I'm faded and gray; 1 will ere ue wurtd, 1 declare ! " And tbe monse stuck hi tail in a d-'Sperste wsy Through the bole at the foot of the stair. My father and mother can traTcl about. But I must stay here till I die. They say I'm too aimt le too small to go out. And think they are wiser than I. ni show them If I eaa be trosted or no If I'm nt ss cunntue as tbey ! The thinirs they call ea t. will aot ind me so slow But 1 can keep out of their way. "1 ehsnt lose my bresth. a mr mother haa done. Nor my tall, ae my tcrsndfather diU. The truih ia, they're gcttiDK Uo old for a run, w hale 1 am sa .pry as a kid.1 So he twisted shoot with his stiff little tall Ti 1 it stuck w&ere bie head was before. Thon started to w.lk to the old sitcoea pall. aum muni wj tiie orurui yeuow noor. Twas qnlte an exenrslon. the traveler thooi;ht, Ae be cautiously Tentuml anad. "How silly !" he murmured. "Mire are to be caucht. n bo should do tue catching tuatcad. 'Let the things tber rail rate bother me if they dare ! I'll carry them home foe DIT tea And tbe mouse locked about with a confident sir 1 or the creatures he thought tot m u be. That gray rnrry mass !j big there In the snn ' tas s mouutain. without any doubt. Be never imagined the thing conld he one OX the cat. he'd been cauUoued about. So he walked to its side in s critical wsy, A sof ( ss itself sbd ss bold -Whn iw to ! went a paw in his srkt of gray, And well, what remains to be tola t The old varent mice came home early that night And pasaed the old cat on tbeir wsy Her jaws were sll bloody, and close st her right I.1V tbe last final end of tbe poor little mile Who thought himself wiser than thee. LaiU Corp tu. Fish Palaces. "Fish palaces I" I hear a little reader exclaim. "What is a fish palace ? I never heard of one be fore." Didn't you ? Well, a fish palace is a very large aquarium. Don't screw up your mouth and squint your eyes as though I'd been fooling you, but read what I have copied for you from an English magazine about a great aquarium. You will be very much in terested. I know. Here it is : You have all read fairy tales of en chanted golden, fishes who were dis guised princes and princesses, and who lived in fish-ponds in the grounds of palaces that ought to have been their own. In these days they build palaces for tbe fishes themselves, without much hope that care or kindness will, change them into anything else. It is one of these palaces I want to tell von some thing about. One day, a good many years aj;o, in walking along a boulevard m i-aris, we saw a window with some curious glasses of living huh and sea anemones in it. Bat though it looked like an ordinary shop, we found our selves, on passing through the door, in a very wonderful pla.'C Straight before us was a turnstile, and bevond the turn stile was a passage full of dim greenish light It was a fish palace, a great aquarium. Low music and dim light were everywhere, and slowly our eyes grew used to it, and we began to see deep green water on each side of us with just a glass between, and all the water full of strange creatures. Once we stopped at a place where hideous monsters with many arms and crreat eyes stared at us ; they were the pieuvres or devil-fish. Then we came to a troop of tiny sea-horses, nodding their heads and curling their tails ; some, fastened by these tails to a bit of rock or sea weed, were maving their heads and bodies in a half circle round and back again, nodding their heads all the time, I suppose catching little tbintrs to eat. Some would suddenly uncurl their tails and dart through the water straight and fast on some errand best known to them selves. Odd, queer little things, enough to mount a wholo regiment of sea fairies. Do you know what a sea-horse is ? He is a very small fellow, not more than about three inches long, whose home is in the Mediterranean Sea ; he has a head very like a bony little black horse, and a tail sometimes straight, sometimes wriggling, prettiest when curled up round and round in ridgy coils, and his rough little neck arched like a spirited pony. But pretty as he was, we had to leave him to look at his neighbors. There were dainty little "demoiselles," also from the Mediterra ean, in tbeir dresses of scarlet snd blue, one or two enormous frogs, sponge and coral-making little creatu ts, and many more, bat it is so long ago that I cannot remember all of them, and the pretty fish palace, like many other pretty things, is gone from Paris. Crooks. "Well, boys, bnsy as bees this bright Saturday afternoon, I see," said Mr. Atkins, or "Uncle Bill." as all the boys called him. "What are you all about ?" he went on as he threw himself on the grass beside them. "I'm trying to make a mast for my ship," said Johnny, who was whittling at a knotty stick, "but the old thing is so crooked that I shall never get a straight mast out of it." "I'm afraid not, indeed. But what are yon at, Ned 1" "I was going to make a telegraph, sir, but the wire is so full of kinks, and they are so hard, I can't get them out." 'Look heie, boys !" cried Jim, com ing from the house, where he had gone for s pitcher of water ; "isn't this jnst the queerest old pitcher you ever saw ? It looks as though it were making faces at you." Sure enongh, the handle was put on all awry, and the mouth was twisted, "as if it had been eating persimmons," Johnny said. "Ah, boys!" said Uncle Bill, "take care of the crooks before they get in so hard. Johnny's stick was once a tender twig that you could bend any way, and now you can't get the crooks off without splitting it all up. Jim's pitcher was once soft clay, and could be moulded into any form, but the crooks are baked in, and you can't get them out, even H you break the pitcher in pieces. And as to Ned's wire, the only thing yon can do with it is to heat it in the lire, and then, when it is red hot, pound them ont. Take care of the crooks, then, lest God put you into the furnace of sorrow, and pound them out with many hard knocks. Or perhaps it may be even worse than that, for the Bible says, 'That which is croeked cannot be made straight,' "Children' Hour. C BOSS-WORD E3I0MA. My first is in skein but not in silk, My second is in water but not in milk ; My third is in noun but not in verb. My fourth is in stock but not in herb ; My fifth is in sad but not in pity. My sixth is in song but not in dit'y ; My whole is the name of a very large city. Answer : Kansas. The Indianapolis Journal says : "As an instance of the increasing value of walnut lumber we note that the stand ing walnut trees on a half section of land on Eel river, in Miami county, was recently sold to a lumber dealer for $17,000. There is a large amount of other timber on the tract which is not included, only the walnut timber being sold." imf The best style of writing is righting wrong. Varieties. Part of the German garrison of Stras borg consists of 600 trained carrier pigeons. , Many cases of diphtheria have re cently occurred in various parts of Cam bria county. Toe may glean knowledge by reading, but you must separate the chaff from the wheat by thinking. Glasgow is about to honor the mem ory of Robert Barns by erecting a col ossal statue of the poet. Rev. Mr. Ancient has received an other gold watch. It is evident that he is getting his reward in time. London thinks that in the course of s few years the Thames embankment will be the finest promenade in Europe. A bale of cotton was sold a auction in Memphis, for the benefit of the suf ferers from yellow fever, and it brought S1.500. The snpply of youno; ladies at Salt Lake is not equal to the demand, and More-men region cries oat for more women. Keep company with persons rather above than beneath yourself ; for gold in the same pocket with silver loseth both its color and weight. When your companion bows to a lady yon should do so also. When a gentle man bows to a lady in your company, always bow to him in return. The most extensive wedding on record occurred a few days since in Cincinnati, when a widowed mother, three sons snd two daughters were all married at once. A citizen of Connecticut, recently in troduced to a newly-married man, con gratulated him warmly, and said, "Ah, these Litchfield county Kirla make clever wives ; lve had three of 'em." Economy is the parent of integrity. of liberty and of ease, and the beaute ous sister of temperance, of cheerful ness and health. Prof useness is a cruel and crafty demon, that gradually in volves her followers in dependence and debt. It was reported that a Iarira amount of practical treasure was found within a few miles of St. John, N. B., a few days ago, owing to the caving in of the bank-earth caused by the encroachment of the sea. The treasure consisted mostly of Spanish coin of the sixteenth century. When they opened the case of the plaster of Paris casts of statues and busts presented to the San Francisco Art Association by tbe Government of France recently, they found that only the legs of the beautiful Apollo Belvi- dere remained, and the head that was on Alexander the Great. The Brazilian Cable between Portugal and Brazil will not be completed for some months. Tempestuous weather has prevented tbe opening- of the first section of the cable between Lisbon and the Madeira Islands, and the contrac tors have therefore been permitted to defer sending the second section to ses until next sriring. The inhabitants of Santa Cruz Bay, on the Pacific coast, depend for a living we are told, upon the whales washed ashore. Lately they were lucky enough to secure a pair of these monsters, and all the inhabitants, young and old, went to work securing blabber. We know some people in this part of the country who try to live in this same way. They are always waiting for a whale or some thing "very like a whale" to arrive, but he never comes. The way to be sure of s whale is to embark on the ocean of enterprise, hunt him np, and then hunt him down. Now that it is the fashion for ladies to load themselves with all manner of breloques hanging from their chate lains, there is an ingenious way of cheating the watch-grab thieves. A Norwegian knife of tortoise-shell, a vinaigrette, tablets, pencil, scissors, and the everlasting cross and heart and anchor are all appended to the chate laine, and a watch-case of tortoise-shell, showing its face but hiding the jewelled back and the gold which would tempt the thieves. The costly watch seems like another cheap tortoise-shell orna ment, and the thieves pass it by. Dr. Dio Lewis tells a good many old truths in a fresh and interesting manner. He has recently pointed out the results of the habit so common among business men. of keeping the head constantly covered while about their business. Ha says that you never see a man lose a hair below where the hat touches, which is a statement not strictly true. We have often seen cases of baldness ex tending far below the line where the hat touches the head. There is no doubt, however, that wearing of silk hats tends to promote baldness. We do not pretend to explain the fact, but we think experience sufficiently demon strates it. A social reformer, writing in Lippin eott's, says: "One effect of the panio, it is to be hoped, will be to make the din ners less magnificently heay. I am sure every lady in New York-who was last winter constrained to sit from seven o'clock until eleven o'clock at those monstrously elaborate and expensive dinners which have become so much the fashion, will be glad to dine in a mora simple manner, in a shorter time, with less display, and with fewer courses and fewer excitements. One entertainer last winter introduced live swans and small canaries to enliven his dinner. The swans splashed rather disagreeably. 'Do you know why he had the swans? said a lady to a gentleman. 'I suppose he wanted the Ltdat of society,' said the gentleman. 'Well, yes, said ths lady, 'but I did not know, although ha is as rich as a jew, that he was a Ju piter.'" The women are catching it hard in sll quarters on the score of extravagance. Preachers fling texts at them. Leo tares toss society jokes at their bonnets and chignons. The papers print all manner of squibs about their ruinous spendthrift ways ; and new even the German journals have taken the matter np, and dish out whole columns of ho nuietic sourkrout for their female read ers. Really this thing is rather over done. Considering that woman has bat one pet weakness, while man has a whole family of them, and that for every dollar she throws away on dress ha wastes ten on cigars, champagne, fancy rides, cards, terriers, dinners at the clubs, and other things of the sort, there is rather more talk than there is wind for, and we all know that words made out of old breath are worse than empty. Three quarters of the extrava gance of society happen to bo of the masculine gender, and three-quarters ol the extravagance of women of which we hear so much is of masculine origin. Considering the facta of the ease, it would be rather mora becoming if soma of our masculine censors prated las and economised more. An onaoa of practice is worth a pound of preach aay time. 1' s